Self Organized Nano-Structures in SrTiO<sub>3</sub> Induced by Plastic Deformation
ORAL
Abstract
Plastic deformation of SrTiO3 single crystals is known to generate a superstructure of line dislocations as confirmed by X-ray and neutron diffraction1. Enhancement of superconductivity and anisotropic conductivity was hypothesized to occur along these dislocation structures. Local strain is known to shift the energy and dissipation of phonons, with strong implications for the mid-infrared optical response in polar crystals. A Scanning Near-field Optical Microscope equipped with a balanced asymmetric Michelson interferometer imaged nanoscale variations in the optical phonon response in plastically deformed SrTiO3. Phase-resolved nano-spectroscopy performed near walls of line dislocations was used to infer the optical phonon parameters and quantify dislocation-induced strain fields in the crystal.
The optical phonon response exhibits a periodic texture of lines correlated with nano-scale surface corrugation oriented perpendicular to the strained axis. Shifts in the surface potential measured using Kelvin probe force microscopy correlate with these dislocation structures, and provides evidence for local strain-induced ferroelectric order. This represents a novel approach to directly probe the real-space superstructure of plastically deformed superconducting ceramic oxides.
[1] Hameed et al. Nat. Mater. 21, 54-61 (2022)
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Presenters
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Liam Thompson
University of Minnesota
Authors
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Liam Thompson
University of Minnesota
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Issam Khayr
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, University of Minnesota
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Chiou Yang Tan
University of Minnesota
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Sajna Hameed
Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research
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Damjan Pelc
Univ of Zagreb, University of Minnesota
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Hayden Binger
University of Minnesota
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Devon Uram
University of Minnesota
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Martin Greven
University of Minnesota
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Alexander S McLeod
University of Minnesota, Columbia University